CA1224702A - Method of guiding saw blades and device for carrying out the method - Google Patents

Method of guiding saw blades and device for carrying out the method

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Publication number
CA1224702A
CA1224702A CA000454989A CA454989A CA1224702A CA 1224702 A CA1224702 A CA 1224702A CA 000454989 A CA000454989 A CA 000454989A CA 454989 A CA454989 A CA 454989A CA 1224702 A CA1224702 A CA 1224702A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
guide
blades
blade
guides
package
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000454989A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Hans Dutina
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
HANS DUTINA AB
Original Assignee
HANS DUTINA AB
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Family has litigation
First worldwide family litigation filed litigation Critical https://patents.darts-ip.com/?family=26658497&utm_source=google_patent&utm_medium=platform_link&utm_campaign=public_patent_search&patent=CA1224702(A) "Global patent litigation dataset” by Darts-ip is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Priority claimed from SE8302997A external-priority patent/SE459238B/en
Application filed by HANS DUTINA AB filed Critical HANS DUTINA AB
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1224702A publication Critical patent/CA1224702A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23DPLANING; SLOTTING; SHEARING; BROACHING; SAWING; FILING; SCRAPING; LIKE OPERATIONS FOR WORKING METAL BY REMOVING MATERIAL, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23D47/00Sawing machines or sawing devices working with circular saw blades, characterised only by constructional features of particular parts
    • B23D47/005Vibration-damping
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27BSAWS FOR WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; COMPONENTS OR ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • B27B5/00Sawing machines working with circular or cylindrical saw blades; Components or equipment therefor
    • B27B5/29Details; Component parts; Accessories
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27BSAWS FOR WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; COMPONENTS OR ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • B27B7/00Sawing machines working with circular saw blades, specially designed for length sawing of trunks
    • B27B7/04Sawing machines working with circular saw blades, specially designed for length sawing of trunks by making use of a plurality of circular saws mounted on a single spindle; Arrangements for adjusting the mutual distances
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27GACCESSORY MACHINES OR APPARATUS FOR WORKING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIALS; TOOLS FOR WORKING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIALS; SAFETY DEVICES FOR WOOD WORKING MACHINES OR TOOLS
    • B27G19/00Safety guards or devices specially adapted for wood saws; Auxiliary devices facilitating proper operation of wood saws
    • B27G19/08Accessories for keeping open the saw kerf, e.g. riving knives or wedge plates
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/202With product handling means
    • Y10T83/2074Including means to divert one portion of product from another
    • Y10T83/2077By kerf entering guide
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/647With means to convey work relative to tool station
    • Y10T83/6584Cut made parallel to direction of and during work movement
    • Y10T83/6587Including plural, laterally spaced tools
    • Y10T83/6588Tools mounted on common tool support
    • Y10T83/659Tools axially shiftable on support
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/707By endless band or chain knife
    • Y10T83/7264With special blade guide means
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/727With means to guide moving work
    • Y10T83/741With movable or yieldable guide element
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/869Means to drive or to guide tool
    • Y10T83/8878Guide

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Sawing (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)
  • Controlling Rewinding, Feeding, Winding, Or Abnormalities Of Webs (AREA)
  • Magnetic Record Carriers (AREA)

Abstract

Abstract A method of guiding the blades (4) of a circular saw in operation, such as at the sawing of, for example, saw timber, timber blocks, battens or other workpieces on wood basis, where one or several blades (4) are located at an axle (6) and each blade is guided by at least one guide (9,11) acting on the blade.

The method is especially characterized in that at least one of the guides (9,11) of each blade (4), and in such a case guides corresponding to each other for all blades (4), separate or together with said corresponding guide of remaining blades in the form of a guide package (9?,11?) during the sawing are floating substantially in the axial direction of the blades (4) and hereby continuously positioned laterally in response to move-ments and position of the workpiece (1) being sawn, substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guide or guide package and/or the lateral movements and lateral position of the blade(s) in connection to the guide (9,11) or guide package (9?,11?).

The invention also relates to a device for carrying out the method.

Fig. 1 to be published.

Description

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Method of guiding saw blades and device for carrying out the method ~his invention relates to a method of guiding the blades of a circular saw in operation, where one or several blades are provided and each blade is guided by one or several guides.
The invention also relates to a device for carrying out the method.
At the sawing of workpieces, for example saw timber/
timber blocks, undesired force and movement phenomena of various kinds arise, which cause sawing problems and contribute primarily to a reduced sawing yield or de-crease in productivity. The problems are described below substantially with reference to a process of manufactur-ing saw timber, which process comprises the steps of reducing and edging resulting in a workpiece with two parallel plane sides, a so-called timber block, and subsequent reducing, at which a workpiece with subst-antially rectangular cross-section is obtained, and subsequent resawing with a circular saw, at which the workpiece is divided in its longitudinal direction by cuts substantially perpendicular to the sides resulting from the edging. The problems involved, however, apply more or less to substantially all sawing of workpieces on wood basis by means of a circular saw.
Processing forces, thus, arise, for example, at the reducing of an edged workpiece and cause undesired lat-eral movements and vibrations of the workpiece. When the reducing, for example, is carried out simultaneous-ly with resawing, the lateral forces are transferred to the blade(s) fixed axially during the sawing and result in the effect of a dynamic force whereby the blade stability and thereby the dimension accuracy at the sawing deteriorate.
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The force phenomenon and the deteriorated bladfl stab-ility normally also give rise to undesired friction phenomenabetween workpiece, saw blade and saw blade guides.
At resawing, furthermore, where the workpiece is ad-vanced in its longitudinal direction by means of horiz-ontal feed rolls or the like, undesired local elastic and plastic deformations of the workpiece are brought about, which give rise to a certain feed in lateral direction. This phenomenon, too, causes lateral forces on and lateral move~,ents of the blade(s), which have a negative effect or, the blade stability and dimension ac~uracy. The same kind of negative effects are obtain-ed atthe feed by feed rolls when the plane sides obt-ained at the edging are not in parallel~
All saw timber, furthermore, is substantially more or less out of straight. At edging, which produces the two plane parallel sides, the main crookedness of the work-piece is caused to be in a plane in parallel with said sides. During the resawing or corresponding operation, the workpiece, irrespective of the longitudinal profile, is fed at straight sawing perpendicularly to the axle of the blades by means of feed rolls or the like, and the sawing is carried out along a substantially straight central line. At straight sawing in this way, of course, conside~able loss is caused, which reduces the sawing yield substantially. A thin circular saw blade fixedin its axial direction during the sawing by guides, thus, of cpurse does not follow the longitud-inal profile of the workpiece at straight feed-in and can neither with acceptable blade stability be caused to follow normally occurring crooked longitudinal prof-iles even when at the feed a certain successive adjust-ment in respect of the longitudinal profile is made.
The difficulty of maintaining an acceptable blade stab-ility partiallyis due to the fact, that the aforesaid stability problems are added to those resulting from the crooked longitudinal profile.

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The stability problem last referred to, as well as the aforedescribed ones,are due to the fact that thin circ-ular saw blades have deficient stability properties com-pared to frame saw and band sa~J blades.
It is, therefore, particularly desirable to eliminate the said effect of undesired lateral movements of the workpiece and thereby to render possible at circular saws to saw accurately straight as well as curve sawing or pith sawing, even when the workpiece during the saw-ing operation vibrates, is displaced laterally or warped.
Curve sawing offers essential advantages in the form of higher volume yield and higher quality, because the longitudinal direction of the sawn board or the like coincides with the longitudinal direction of the wood fibres.
The present invention relates to a method and a device for guiding the saw blade(s) of a circular saw which constitute a solution of the aforesaid blade stability problems. Accuracy in dimension at straight sawing and curve sawing is hereby made possible, because the effect of undesired dynamic lateral movements and vibr-ations of the workpiece have been substantially elim-inated. It is further possible to attach more guides to each blade in order to improve the stability prop-erties of the blade at straight and curve sawing. This affects bending waves in the saw blade body without risk of undesired friction phenomena between guides and blade.
The invention also eliminates to a substantial extent the necessity of accurate pre-setting of guides and blades, because the freely movable guides are self-ad-Justing.
A preferred embodiment increases additionally the poss-ibilities of solving the blade stability problems at circular saws. The adaptation between guides, blades lz2~7a2 and movements and position of the workpiece is improved still more, whereby the effect of undesired dynamic force phenomena between workpiece and blade and, respect-ively, between blade and guide(s) is reduced still more.
The blade stability increases and the~centering accur-acy of the set of saw blades over the workpiece is im-proved especially at curve and pith sawing.
The invention, thus, relates to a method of guiding the blade(s) of a circular saw in operation, for ex-ample at the sawing of e.g. saw timber, timber blocks, battens or other workpiece on wood basis, where one or several blades are provided on an axle and each blade is guided by at least one guide acting to the blade.
The method is especially characterized in that at least one of the guides of each blade, and at this guides corr-esponding to each other for all blades, separately or together with said corresponding guide of other blades in the form of a guide package during the sawing are floating substantially in the axial direction of the blades and hereby continuously are positioned laterally in response to the movements and position of the work-piece being sawn, substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guide or guide pack-age,and/or to the lateral movements and lateral position of the blade(s) in connection to the guide or guide package.
The invention also relates to a device for guiding the blades of a circular saw in operation, for example at the sawing of e.g. saw timber, timber blocks, ba~tens or other workpiece on wood basis, where one or several blades are located on an axle and each blade is guided by at least one guide acting on the blade.
The device is especially characterized in that at least one of the guides of each blade, and at this guides corresponding to each other for all blades, separately lZZ47(~;

or substantially rigidly connected to said correspond-ing guides to a guide package are floating substantially in the axial direction of the blades and continuously positioned laterally in response to the movements and position of the workpiece being sawn substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guide or guide package and/or the lateral movements and lateral position of the blade(s) in connection to the guide or guide package.
The invention is described in greater detail in the following, with reference to some embodiments and to the accompanying drawings, in which Fig. 1 schematically shows a first embodiment of a device according to the invention seen from above, Fig. 2 shows the device according to Fig. 1 seen from below in Fig. 1~ Fig. 3 very schematically shows a second embodiment of a device according to the invention for guiding the feed-in of a timber block, Fig. 4 is an imaginable cross-section of a wood piece reduced to a timber block, Fig. 5 schematically shows the feed of a crooked work-piece, Fig. 6 schematically shows a third embodiment of a device according to the invention seen from above, Fig. 7 shows the device according to Fig. 6 seen from below in Fig. 6~ Fig. 8 schematically shows an indiv-idually rotatable guide according to the invention, Fig. 9 schematically shows a guide according to the invention individually rotatable via rubber springs, and Fig. 10 very schematically shows a fourth embodim-ent of a device according to the invention:for sensing the position and obliqueness of the blades, for example for ~ guiding ~he feed-in of a workpiece or for guid-ing the adjustment of the drive axle.
In Fig. 1 an edged workpiece is designated by 1 . The numeral 2 designates opposed chipper discs for reducing ~ZZ47~;~

the workpiece 1 to a workpiece 1 in the form of a so-called square-sawn timber block 1. Imaginable cross sections are shown in ~ig. 4, where the portions rem-oved at the reducing operation are indi-cated dashed ~he timber block 1 is intended by means of feed rolls 3, marked in Figs. 1 and 2, to be fed to and through a circular saw comprising one or several blades 4 and thereby to be divided into timber block portions 5.
In Fig. 1 six blades are shown. The blades are attach-ed with a stationary hub, as shown to the right in Fig.
2, or with a floating hub, as shown to the left in Fig.
2, on an axle 6. In the case of floating hub, the blades 4 are connected to the axle 6, saw spindle 6~ by means of splines or the like. In the case of stationary hub, according to the invention the blades 4 are arranged in a package on a sleeve 7 or the like, which is mov-able at the axle or axially fixed on the spindle 6.
Each blade 4 is guided during the sawing operation by at least one guide 9,11 acting on both sides of the blade, for example at the peripheral portion ~ there-of, as shown in Figs. 1 and 2, where the guides are of a suitable known kind. According to the embodiment shown, for each blade are provided a front guide 9 loc-ated in connection to the feed-in area 8 for the timber block 1, and a rear guide 11 located in connection to the rear portion 10 of the blade, at which portion the timber block portions 5 formed at the sawing are in-tended to leave the blades. At the rear guides 11 pref-erably guide plates 12, guide knives 12, or correspond-ing means are provided directly in front of the resp-ective blade and intended a.o. to keep the portions 5 apart.
According to the invention at least one of the guides 9, 11 of each blade, in this case both the front one 9 and the rear one 11, together with corresponding guide 9,11 of, in applicable cases, remaining blades, are substant-~Z2~7(3 2 ially rigidly connected to a guide package 9 ,11 , andrnounted floating substantially in the axial direction of the blades 4, and continuously are positioned laterally in response to the movements and position of the work-piece 1 being sawn substantially in the axial direct-ion of the blades in connection to the guide package and/or the lateral movements and lateral position of the blades in connection to the guide package. It-is imaginable, at least at the rear guides 11, that these are separate, i.e. not connected to a package 11 , in which case said lateral positioning takes place individ-ually for each guide 11, in response to said movements and position in connection to the guide. Each floating guide 9,11 or guide package 9 ,11' is movable on guide ways 13 or the like, for example as shown in Figs. 1 and 2.
According to the invention, means for sensing said move-ments and for said displacing are provided. At the embodiment shown in Figs. 1 and 2 said means for the front guides 9 consist of guide rolls 14, which are connected to khe front guide package 9' and during the sawing abut the side surfaces 15 of the timber block 1, which are substantially in parallel with the blades 4, whereby the axial position of the guide package, and thereby of the blades 4, is guided directly by the timber block 1, so that the saw blade stability and the centering can be maintained independently of the lat-eral movements and lateral position of the workpiece 1.
Preferably at least one roll 14 is adjustable to and from the other roll.
The rolls, of course, can be replaced by guide ways or the like in a manner obvious for bringing about the mech-anical coupling between timber block and guide package.
It also can be imagined that a longitudinal, straight or curved groove 1", marked in Fig. 1, is milled in the lower surface of the block prior to the feed-in, and a ~2~ilq~2 longitudinal guide knife (not shown) is located at the guide package 9 , which in this way is coupled mechanic-ally to the block 1 for sensing the movements and posit-ion thereof. It also is imaginable that the position and movements of the block are sensed from above, for example by means of biconic rolls, which are connected to the guide package 9 .
It can also be imagined that at least the position of the timber block continuously is sensed mechanically or without contact adjacent the guide package 9 , and that adjusting means not directly connected to the timb-er block are provided for continuously moving the guide package 9' on the basis of the sensed position of the timber block 1.
It is, of course, imaginable to use combinations of two or more of the arrangements described, or of other arrangements, and of methods for sensing the movements and position of the workpiece.
At the embodiment shown in Figs. 1 and 2, the rear guide package is floating and freely movable. The means for sensing the movements of the timber block portions 5 consist of the blades 4 and said guide knives 12, bec-ause these are affected mechanically by and adjusted in view of said movements, and the means for moving the guide package 11' of the blades 4 and said guide knives 12. The guide package, thus, follows the move-ments of the portions 5 via the blades 4 and guide knives. It is imaginable that the guide knives 12 are omitted, in which case the guide package is positioned laterally only by the blades 4. It is, of course, imag-inable that guide rolls, guide wa~s or the like arÇ prov-ided also at the rear guides for sensing the movements and position of the workpiece.
In Fig. 3 the numerals 17,18 designate means, mechanical or contactless, for continuously sensing the position of 12Z47~2 the front and rear portion of the respective guide package, and therewith directly of the blades, in relation to a reference. Information is hereby obt-ained on the position of the packages 9 , 11 relative to each other, which information is intended by suit-able calculation and control means of substantially known type to be utilized for continuously guiding the feed-in of the timber block, so that the front and rear guide of each blade will be located substantially in a plane perpendicular to the saw spindle, irrespective of the longitudinal profile of the timber block, whereby good stability of the blade is obtained. In Fig. 3 only one blade is shown. It also is imaginable on the basis of said information in a suitable way to continuously adjust the saw spindle, as marked in Fig. 3, in rel-ation to the longitudinal direction of the workpiece, whereby substantially the same result is obtained.
The adjusting of the saw spindle 6 can be combined with the guiding Or the feed-in. It also can be imagined that the position of the front and rear portion of the guides and blades are sensed indirectly, for ex-ample by sensing the position of the workpiece. It is imaginable that only one guide pa~kage is floating, in which case the position thereof is sensed.
At the embodiments shown in Figs. 6-lO Or a device according to the invention, said lateral positioning at least partially is intended to take place by turning the guide 9,11 or guide package 9',11 ,in that the guide or guide package is rotatable about an axis of rotation substantially in parallel with the plane of the blades 4.
According to the embodiment shown by way of example in Figs. 6 and 7, said floating guides 9,11 are mov-able substantially in the axial direction of the blades ~L2Z~7(:~2 and also rotatable as indicated by the arrows A and, respectively, A" in Fig. 6. The guides, as shown in Figs. 6 and 7, can be movable simultaneously along guide ways 13 or the like as one unit by means of a supporting plate 13' or the like and at the sa~e time be rotatable as one package 9 ,11 which is rotatable about a common axle 19 or the like constituting said axle of rotation. It also is possible to imagine embod-iments where the guides 9,11 are movable simultane-ously, as in Figs. 6 and 7, but where each guide 9,11 is rotatable individually about an axle 20~ as indic-ated schematically in Fig. 8, where only one guide 9, 11 is shown. Embodiments can also be imagined where the floating guides are only rotatable, either as a package 9 ,11' according to Figs. 6 and 7 or individu-ally as in Fig. 8.
The guides 9,11 or a guide package 9',11 , of course, can be rotatable in a way other than by axles 19,20, for example by means of elastic connections, for ex-ample rubber connections 21, located at the sides of a guide and at supporting members 22, as schematically shown in Fig. 4, whereby an axis of rotation 21 is obtained between the elastic means.
In order to improve the dynamic properties of the guides, resilience, inertia and damping can be coupled to the rotation, for example via external means.
Substantially as at the embodiment according to Figs.
1 and ?, means are provided for sensing said movements and for said rotation and/or displacement. At the em-bodiment according to Figs. 6 and 7 these means for the front guide package 9 consist of guide rolls 23 connected to the guide package-and during:the sawing abutting the side surfaces 15 of the timber block 1 which are substantially in parallel with the blades 4, ~Z247(:~Z

whereby the axial position of the guide package and thereby of the blades is guided directly by the work-piece 1, timber block 1, so that sawing stability and centering.can be maintained irrespective of lateral movements and lateral position of the workpiece 1.
The rolls 23 preferably are connected to the rotatable guide package 9 . In order by turning the package 9 to facilitate the adaptation, for example, to changes in direction, crookedness, of the block 1, said sensing means can be extended in the longitudinal direction of the block 1, for example in such a way that several rolls 2~ are provided on each side of the block 1, as shown in Figs. 6 and 7. It is, of course, possible to imagine embodiments where only one roll 23 is located on each side of the block.
As at the embodiment shown in Figs. 1 and 2, the rolls, of course, can be replaced by guide ways or the like in an obvious manner. It is also imaginable that guid-ance is brought about by a longitudinal groove accord-ing to Fig. 4 in the block. In this case it also can be imagined (not shown) that sensing is effected from above by means of. for example, biconic rolls connected to ~he guide package.
Embodiments substantially according to Figs. 6 and 7 (not shown) also can be imagined where at least the position of the timber block 1 continuously is sensed mechanically or contactless adjacent the guide package 9 , and that adjusting means not directly connected to the timber block are provided for continuous lateral pos-itioning, turning and, when applicable, displacement of the guide package 9 on the basis of the sensed block position.
It is, of course, also imaginable to use combinations of two or more of the aforesaid or other means and methods for sensing movements and position of the workpiece.

122~7~2 In Fig. 10, which substantially corresponds to Fig. 3, the numerals 17,18 designate means, mechanical or con-tactless ones, for continuously sensing the position of the front and rear portions,and thereby directly of the blades, in relation to a reference. The numerals 24,25 designate means, only indicated, such as angle trans-mitters of known type, for sensing the obliquity of the guides in relation to a reference posi~ion. Infor-mation is hereby obtained on the position and direct-ion of the packages relative to each other, and on the inclination of the blades relative to the spindle 6.
What was said with reference to Fig. 3, applies in remaining respects also here.
It is possible to imagine within the scope of the in-vention also a method and a device where guide(s) and7 or saw spindle are adjustable and adjusted by displace-ment/turning in view of the average inclination over the sawing line of the entire workpiece or of critical portions thereof. The guide(s) and/or saw spindle are hereby given a fixed or substantially fixed inclinat-ion, which is adapted to the average position and move-ments of the entire workpiece or portions thereof, whereby undesired force phenomena on guides and blades are reduced and whereby the workpiece can be sawn with regard paid to crookedness of the longitudinal profile or obliquity over the sawing line caused by the feed-in.
The method and mode of operation of the device according to the invention substantially should have become appar-ent from the aforesaid.
By a first sawing operation, not shown and discussed here, and subsequent reduction, a timber block with substantially planeparallel sides is obtained. The timber block is fed in a substantially rectilinear path to the saw by means of feed rolls. During the sawing the timber block or the like moves in the axial direction of the blades relative to an arbitrary fixed point in lZ~47~2 connection to the feed-in area. These movements are a.o. random, relatively rapid displacements~ for ex-ample owing to the reduction or deficiencies of the feed equipment, and more continuous displacements owing a.o. to deviations from an entirely straight longitudinal profile. These latter displacements are illustrated in Fig. 5. The position of the side surf-ace 15 which will be sensed at the arrow, at the passing feed of the block first will be displaced up-ward and thereafter downward in the Figure.
By adjustment, movement and/or turning of the front guide package in response to the position of the block in connection to the package, in front thereof, autom-atic centering is obtained. Due to the fact that the rear guide package is freely movable and/or rotatable and thereby adapts to the movements of the blades and portions 5, sawing proceeds with adaptation to the longitudinal profile of the timber block or the like, i.e. the timber block will be curve sawn, and at the same time said lateral movements can be taken up without great làteral forces arising on the blades.
As the blades as well as the guide package(s) are float-ing and movable/rotatable, the position of the blades, the position of the guides and the position of the workpiece are adjusted to each other.
At the embodiments according to Figs. 1,2,6 and 7, in applicable cases, movable rolls are tightened up when the first end of the timber block passes the rolls.
At the embodiments according to Figs. 3 and 10 the unsawn portion of the timber block, i.e. ~he portion located before the saw, is intended to be moved subst-antially transversely to its longitudinal direction, so that the guides are located in a plane substantially perpendicular to the saw spindle irrespective of the ~Z2~ 2 lLI

longitudinal profile of the timber block. It is imag-inable to sense, for example, the position of a guide package and the position of a side surface of the unsawn block.
It can be ima~in~d, of course, also to apply the method and device, for example, to two-sawn workpieces, i.e. with cross-sections, for example, according to the dashed outer contour in Fi~. ~ and 7 thus, not square sawn. It also is imaginable to apply the method and dev-ice to saw timber, battens or othe workpieces on wood basis.
As should have become apparent, the method and device according to the invention provide the possibility of circular sawing where the influence of undesired later-al movements etc. of the workpiece during the sawing operation has been eliminated. This is rendered possible in these connections by very simple and inexpensive means. As the position of the timber block adjacent the guide package(s) is utilized for adjusting the position of the blades to the workpiece, imperfectnesses of the positioning, for example a certain obliqueness of the positioning of the workpiece when being placed in the saw substantially are eliminated. At the simpler variat-ions and embodiments, by means of floating guides or guide packages the dynamic rigidness and stability, for example at straight sawing, are improved.
The described rotatability of the guides which often is to be preferred renders it possible to incline the blades,substantially without giving rise to undesired force phenomena between guides and blade. The rotatab-ility offers advantages over the advantages of floating movable guides. The rotatability of the guides, for ex-ample, implies good adaptation between guides and blades.
Furthermore, when the distance between the axis of rotation of the guides and the circumference of the ~ZZ47~Z

blades adjacent the guides is small, a moderate rotat-ion, inclination, does not cause an undesired dis-placement of the sawing area in the axial direction of the blades, which is desired at certain applications.
The good adaptation between guides and Plades also im-plies that, in relation to the blades, radially large guides can be used without causing undesired friction phenomena, and that the saw spindle can be inclined without giving rise to centering problems or undesired force phenomena.
The invention has been described above with reference to some embodiments. Of course, more embodiments and minor alterations can be imagined without~ therefore, abandoning the invention idea.
Within the scope of the invention, thus, a plurality of combinations of floating or floating and fixed guides or guide packages can be imag~ned~ Embodiments can be imagined, for example, where only one guide package or one guide of each blade, preferably the rear one(s), are floating, whereby an improvement in dynamic rigid-ity is obtained, and whereby the front guides, separ-ate or as a package, are fixed in axial direction dur-ing the sawing. The rear guides, as mentioned, can be separate or arranged in a package and may have no means for sensing said movements and position or may be prov-ided with guide knives or guide rolls, guide ways or the like.
As should have become apparent from the aforesaid, a plurality of different means for sensing said movements and position can be imagined. A.o. biconic rolls, dia-bole rolls. have been mentioned which are suitable at feed from above of two-sawn blocks. Means can also be imagined of known type for positioning at curve sawing where pressure- or spring-loaded rolls are provided which follow the longitudinal profile of the workpiece and which, by said load which is well balanced, are ~2247~:)2 capable to compensate for irregularities etc. in the surfaces, on which guidance is effected, while at the same time following the average continuous longitudinal profile of the workpiece.
The means for sensing movements and position of the workpiece, said rolls or the like~ must not necessar-ily be placed on the rotatable ~uide package 9 , as shown in Fig. 6, but embodiments can be imagined where the means are located at the supporting plate 13 or the like. Combinations of said locations also can be imagined.
The said means for milling the groove 1", which is straight or intended to follow the longitudinal profile Or the workpiece, are of a suitable known type.
It is, of course, not necessary to arrange guides as front or rear guides, but guides can be placed in other positions in the circumferential direction of a blade.
It can be imagined to connect external means to float-ing guides according to the invention in order to dampen vibrations and oscillations, by which means resilience, damping and mass inertia can be supplied.
What has been stated in general about the method and device according to the invention is, of course, obvi-ously applicable irrespective of whether the floating guides are only movable or both movable and rotatable.
The invention, thus, must not be regarded restricted to the embodiments des^ribed above, but can be varied within the scope of the attached claims.

Claims (21)

The embodiments of the invention in which an ex-clusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A method of guiding the blades of a circular saw in operation, for example at the sawing of saw timber, timber blocks, battens or other workpieces on wood basis, where one or several blades are located at an axle and each blade is guided by at least one guide acting on the blade, characterized in that at least one of the guides of each blade and in such a case guides corresponding to each other for all blades, separate or together with said corresponding guide of remaining blades in the form of a guide package during the sawing are floating substantially in the axial direction of the blades and hereby continu-ously are positioned laterally in response to the move-ments and position of the workpiece being sawn, substan-tially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guide or guide package and/or the lateral movements and lateral position of the blade(s) in connection to the guide or guide package.
2. A method as defined in claim 1, characterized in that said lateral positioning at least partially is effec-ted by rotating the guide or guide package about an axis of rotation substantially in parallel with the plane of the blade(s).
3. A method as defined in claim 2, characterized in that said floating guides are positioned laterally parti-ally by movement substantially in the axial direction of the blades and partially by said rotation.
4. A method as defined in claim 1, where each blade is guided by a front guide located in connection to the feed-in area, sawing area, for the workpiece char-acterized in that during the sawing said front guides separate or as a guide package, are floating and contin-uously positioned laterally substantially in the axial direction of the blades, in response to the movements and position of the workpiece, substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guide package and/or lateral movements and lateral position of the blades.
5. A method as defined in claim 1, where every blade in connection to its rear portion, at which the workpiece portions formed at the sawing leave the blades, is guided by means of a rear guide, characterized in that said rear guides, separate or as a guide package, are floating and continuously be positioned laterally substantially in the axial direction of the blades in response to the movements and position of said portions and/or blades substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guides.
6. A method as defined in claim 1, characterized in that said floating guide package is connected to mechani-cal guide means, such as guide ways, guide rolls, a guide knife or the like, which during the sawing are caused to abut the workpiece, whereby the axial position of the guide package, and therewith of the blades, continuously and directly is guided by the movements and position of the workpiece.
7. A method as defined in claim 1, characterized in that said movements and position of the workpiece in con-nection to the guide package continuously are sensed mec-hanically or free of contact, and that the guide package continuously is positioned laterally substantially in the axial direction of the blades on the basis of said sensed movements and position by adjusting means not directly connected to the workpiece.
8. A method as defined in claim 1, characterized in that the axial position of the front and/or rear portions of the blade(s) and therewith the inclination of the blade(s) relative to said axle saw spindle are sensed by sensing the lateral position of the guides, whereby rota-tion and/or movement is sensed.
9. A method as defined in claim 1 where rear guides are provided, characterized in that at least certain of said rear guides are connected to guide knives, where each guide knife is located substantially in front of and behind a blade.
10. A method as defined in claim 1, characterized in that the guide(s) and/or saw spindle are adjusted in view of the average inclination over the sawing line of the en-tire longitudinal profile of the workpiece or of parts of said longitudinal profile.
11. A device for guiding the blades of a circular saw in operation, for example at the sawing of saw timber, timber blocks, battens or other workpieces on wood basis, where one or several blades are located at an axle and each blade is guided by at least one guide acting on the blade, characterized in that at least one of the guides of each blade, and in such a case guides corresponding to each other for all blades, separate or substantially rigidly connected to said corresponding guides to a guide package, are arranged floating substantially in the axial direction of the blades and continuously positioned later-ally in response to the movements and position of the workpiece being sawn substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guide or guide package and/or the lateral movements and lateral position of the blade(s) in connection to the guide or guide package.
12. A device as defined in claim 11, characterized in that said lateral positioning at least partially is intended to take place by rotating the guide or guide package, and that the guide or guide package is rotatable about an axis of rotation substanially in parallel with the plane of the blades.
13. A device as defined in claim 11, characterized in that said floating guides are movable substantially in the axial direction of the blades and also rotatable.
14. A device as defined in claim 11, where each blade is guided by means of a front guide located in con-nection to the feed-in area, sawing area, for the work-piece, characterized in that a guide package comprising said front guides is continuously positioned laterally in response to movements and position of the workpiece sub-stantially in the axial direction of the blades in connec-tion to the lateral movements and lateral position of the guide package and/or blades in connection to the guide package.
15. A device as defined in claim 11, where each blade in connection to its rear portion, at which the workpiece portions formed at the sawing leave the blades, is guided by a rear guide, characterized in that said rear guides, separate or as a guide package, are continuously positioned laterally in response to the movements and position of the workpiece, said portions and/or the blades substantially in the axial direction of the blades in connection to the guides.
16. A device as defined in claim 11, where said floa-ting guides are arranged in a guide package, characterized in that the guide package is movable substantially in the axial direction of the blades by means of guide ways or the like, and that the guides comprised in the package either are rigidly connected and rotable about a common axle or separate and in this case individually rotatable each about an axle.
17. A device as defined in claim 11, characterized in that said floating guide package is connected to mech-anical guide means, such as guide ways, guide rolls, a guide knife or the like, intended during the sawing to abut the workpiece, whereby the axial position of the guide package and therewith of the blades is guided direct-ly by the workpiece, so that saw blade stability and cen-tering can be maintained irrespective of lateral movements or lateral position of the workpiece.
18. A device as defined in claim 11, characterized in that means are comprised therein for continuous mechanical or contactless sensing of said movements and position of the workpiece in connection to the guide package, and that adjusting means not directly connected to the workpiece are provided for continuous lateral positioning of the guide package in response to said movements and position.
19. A device as defined in claim 11, characterized in that means are provided for sensing the axial position of the front and/or rear portions of the blade(s) and there-with of the inclination of the blade(s) relative to said axle, saw spindle and means are provided for sensing the rotation and/or movement of the guides.
20. A device as defined in claim 11, where rear guides are provided, characterized in that at least cer-tain of said rear guides are connected to guide knives and each guide knife is located substantially directly in front of and behind a blade.
21. A device as defined in claim 11, characterized in that the guide(s) and/or saw spindle are adjustable and intended to be adjusted in view of the average inclin-ation over the sawing line of the entire longitudinal profile or portions of said longitudinal profile of the workpiece.
CA000454989A 1983-05-27 1984-05-24 Method of guiding saw blades and device for carrying out the method Expired CA1224702A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE8302997A SE459238B (en) 1983-05-27 1983-05-27 Circular saw blades guiding system
SE8302997-5 1983-05-27
SE8304524-5 1983-08-19
SE8304524A SE459239B (en) 1983-05-27 1983-08-19 PROCEDURE FOR CONTROL OF A CIRCLE SAW SAW SHEET AND DEVICE FOR EXERCISE OF THE PROCEDURE

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CA1224702A true CA1224702A (en) 1987-07-28

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CA000454989A Expired CA1224702A (en) 1983-05-27 1984-05-24 Method of guiding saw blades and device for carrying out the method

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US (1) US4599929A (en)
CA (1) CA1224702A (en)
DE (1) DE3419220C2 (en)
FI (1) FI842110A (en)
NO (1) NO160063C (en)
SE (1) SE459239B (en)

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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE3419220C2 (en) 1994-04-28
NO842099L (en) 1984-11-28
SE8304524D0 (en) 1983-08-19
NO160063C (en) 1989-03-08
NO160063B (en) 1988-11-28
SE459239B (en) 1989-06-19
FI842110A0 (en) 1984-05-25
US4599929A (en) 1986-07-15
FI842110A (en) 1984-11-28
DE3419220A1 (en) 1984-11-29
SE8304524L (en) 1984-11-28

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